What does success look like for Biden and Putin?
ABC News Chief Global Affairs Correspondent Martha Raddatz highlighted the "incredible" body language seen in Biden and Putin's face-to-face meeting and said the images captured there already make the summit a success for Putin.
"I think President Putin, you saw those pictures of president Putin with President Biden. That's essentially what he wants right there," Raddatz said. "The relaxed President Putin sitting back in his chair, Joe Biden looking relaxed as well. All of this is so rehearsed."
"They know the world is looking at those pictures, especially Vladimir Putin. He wants to be on the world stage," she added.
Even with Putin denying Russian involvement in recent U.S. cyberattacks, his refusal to discuss imprisoned opposition leader Alexey Navalny with Biden going into the meeting, and the two leaders still likely to air their grievances in dueling press conferences later, Raddatz said, since relations are so low, any progress will be a win.
"I think because they have lowered the bar so far, but it's still a bar, that any progress will be seen as a win according to Joe Biden and probably according to Vladimir Putin, too," she said.